Legislative Wins, Broken Promises: Gaps in Implementation of Laws On Violence Against Women and Girls
Legislative Wins, Broken Promises: Gaps in Implementation of Laws On Violence Against Women and Girls
Legislative Wins, Broken Promises: Gaps in Implementation of Laws On Violence Against Women and Girls
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acronyms 3
Executive summary 4
1. Introduction 7
8. Conclusion 48
Appendix A: Legislation 49
References 50
Notes 55
Acknowledgements 58
Despite these laws, the global prevalence of VAWG remains disturbingly high. Over one-third
of ever-partnered women worldwide have experienced physical or sexual violence, one in five
women have been abused as girls, and tens of millions of girls every year are at risk of female
genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), early or forced marriage, and sexual violence while pursuing
their education. Legislation alone will not eliminate VAWG, but these laws could have a lot more
impact on reducing the prevalence of VAWG if they are consistently supported by effective
implementation. Unfortunately, there is mounting evidence to show that implementation often
has serious deficiencies.
This Oxfam report, based on research conducted in seven countries in the Global South,
examines the problem of implementation gaps the shortfalls between governments
legislative commitments to address and prevent VAWG, and the on-the-ground realities in terms
of prevention, access to services, and access to justice for women and girls who experience
violence. It will be of interest to government officials and policy makers, institutional actors
involved in implementing VAWG laws (e.g., law enforcement, the judiciary), non-government
organizations (NGOs) and womens rights organizations (WROs), and academics and activists
committed to ending VAWG.
Through literature reviews, policy analyses, and interviews with key groups of stakeholders, the
research set out to answer five main questions:
What types of implementation gaps (shortfalls or failures) exist?
Where or among which actors do the gaps occur?
What are the main reasons that explain implementation gaps?
What is needed to improve implementation?
What could Oxfam and other CSOs do better or differently to influence relevant actors to
better implement VAWG legislation?
In addition to focusing on shortfalls and failures of implementation, the research also examines
what is being implemented relatively well and why, so that lessons can be drawn from those
cases and experiences. Two of the countries Burkina Faso and Dominican Republic were
identified as having better implementation of VAWG legislation, and participated in the project
as positive deviance examples.
Key findings
Despite significant differences in the VAWG legislation across the seven countries, significant
similarities emerged in terms of implementation gaps.
First, those responsible for implementing VAWG laws are failing to effectively follow the
processes and procedures required of them. These shortfalls relate to how womens reports of
violence are handled, the measures of protection that women should be afforded to prevent
further harm, and the enforcement of court orders. Second, there are significant deficiencies in
VAWG infrastructure and services. These include shelters, counselling, and legal aid services
for women and girls who experience violence, as well as proper detention facilities for
perpetrators. Third, there are serious problems with how women who have experienced
violence are treated as they try to access justice and support services. Oftentimes, they are re-
victimized, blamed, not believed, or dissuaded from pressing charges.
The research found 14 explanations for these implementation gaps across the seven countries,
and examines five of the most cited ones in greater detail. First, legislation is not accompanied
by sufficient financial resources from the state for implementation. International funding is
important, but not sustainable. Second, those responsible for implementing the law often do not
have the information, awareness, and skills they need. Many do not know the law well or what
their obligations are, and training is insufficient or not sustained adequately over time. Third,
there is insufficient coordination and clarity of roles among key stakeholders, such as law
enforcement and service providers, who must work together to implement the law. Fourth,
individual attitudes and social norms that condone VAWG and gender inequality shape the
behavior of implementing actors in ways that are detrimental to survivors. The research thus
demonstrates the links between the sociocultural and the political. Finally, political will the
states demonstrated prioritization of VAWG as a central concern is sorely lacking, reflected in
corruption, poor accountability compliance, and lack of budgetary allocations.
Implementation of VAWG legislation in the Dominican Republic and Burkina Faso, while far
from perfect, presents some good lessons. For instance, the Dominican Republic has made
significant strides in establishing the institutional infrastructure and the training necessary for
women to access services and justice. Much of this is attributable to effective coordination and
cooperation among key stakeholders, and a well-organized feminist movement that is willing
and able to collaborate with the state while maintaining independence and a critical stance. In
Burkina Faso, where research focused on penal code provisions that outlaw FGM/C specifically,
penal approaches have been combined with strategies aimed at lowering the social acceptance
of FGM/C. Keys to progress in this case include considerable political will and action plans
supported by international funding.
The state is ultimately responsible for implementing its legislative commitments, but experience
shows that civil society organizations (CSOs) must strongly and continuously urge it to do so.
The report shares lessons from some successes in this regard. Although relationships with
government can be fraught with difficulty, CSOs and WROs need to find openings for
engagement. They are encouraged to: be well organized among themselves and creative in
their advocacy; be willing to collaborate with the state; establish themselves as sought-after
experts; and propose detailed demands for better implementation.
The spirit and promise of laws on VAWG have not been sufficiently fulfilled because many
states have not risen to the challenge and obligation of implementation. Even in struggling
countries, there are steps that every institutional actor can take ideally in concert with others,
especially WROs to improve implementation. This report adds to the evidence base that duty-
bearers are not doing enough to fulfill their commitments, but also contributes to the knowledge
base about what needs to be done and has worked in order to strengthen the impact of laws
on the elimination of VAWG.
The global prevalence of VAWG remains disturbingly high. Over one-third of ever-partnered
women worldwide have experienced physical or sexual violence (World Health Organization,
2013: 20), one in five women have been abused as girls (World Health Organization, 2014: 2),3
and tens of millions of girls every year are at risk of female genital mutilation, early or forced
marriage, and sexual violence while pursuing their education (UNICEF, 2013: 114; Moosa et al.,
2010: 7, 15).
VAWG violates human rights, impedes active citizenship, constrains the eradication of poverty,
and is a major cause of death, physical and mental health problems, and disability (Rosche,
2013). According to a study of nine countries representing both the Global North and South,
addressing VAWG costs up to two percent of national GDP, which could deprive other
economic development efforts of critical resources (Duvvury et al., 2013: 25).
Owing in no small part to the advocacy of womens and feminist movements, VAWG is
increasingly on the agendas of human rights and development actors worldwide. VAWG is the
subject of numerous regional and international agreements, which condemn it and establish the
critical principle of due diligence the obligation of states to prevent and address VAWG as a
human rights violation (Abdul Aziz and Moussa, 2014). Under this principle and the instruments
that stipulate it, states are called upon to reform their legal frameworks in order to prevent
VAWG, protect survivors, prosecute and punish perpetrators, and provide recompense for
survivors and their dependants. As a result, and due to increased pressure by womens and
feminist movements, over the past few decades there has been a substantial increase in
legislation and related policies around the world: today over 125 countries have some sort of
legislation on VAWG, compared to only a handful in 1990 (The World Bank, 2016: 20).
These legislative developments mark a significant positive shift in global discourse and state
action, and are critical ingredients in the fight against VAWG. However, it is becoming
increasingly obvious that the implementation of domestic VAWG/GBV legislation is falling far
short of the spirit of these laws and governments stated commitments (Garca-Moreno et al.,
2014; Ertrk, 2006), both in terms of access to justice, and access to support services and
reparations. These implementation gaps failures and shortfalls between states legislative
commitments and on-the-ground realities are the focus of this report. It must be
acknowledged that laws alone will not eliminate VAWG, but this report starts from the premise
that strong implementation of existing legislation is critical in order to address human rights
violations of women and girls, to change social norms that underpin VAWG, to build public
confidence in institutions, and to fulfill commitments that governments have made to protect
human rights.
The research project entailed seven country-based studies: Benin, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, the
Dominican Republic, India, Malawi, and Nicaragua, and focused on the implementation of a
specific piece of VAWG legislation in each.5 In addition to focusing on shortfalls and failures, the
project also examined what is being implemented relatively well and why, informed by the
concept of positive deviance,6 and a comparative approach to addressing the research
questions. To this end, and as further explained below, two of the seven participant countries
the Dominican Republic and Burkina Faso were identified for having comparatively better
implementation of VAWG/GBV legislation.
This report is written for a diverse range of audiences, including government officials and
bureaucrats, other institutional actors involved in implementing VAWG/GBV-related laws or
policies (e.g., police, the judiciary, lawyers, etc.), non-government organizations (NGOs) and
womens rights organizations (WROs) that work on VAWG/GBV (including Oxfam and its
partner organizations), and academics and activists committed to ending VAWG/GBV. It is
intended to enhance readers knowledge and understanding of VAWG/GBV implementation
gaps, and to be a basis for new or strengthened action, whether in implementing legislation or in
influencing responsible actors to do so more effectively.
This report is of considerable importance. There have been myriad calls at the international
level for the improvement of implementation of VAWG/GBV legislation and policy (e.g., (UN
Women, 2013; UN Economic and Social Council, 2015)), but there is comparatively little
research and evidence to inform such action. National-level monitoring and evaluation of policy
implementation is rarely conducted (Manjoo, 2013; Weldon and Htun, 2013), giving rise to the
need for studies of implementation such as this one (Garca-Moreno et al., 2014). Although
small in scale, the research presented in this report brings an in-depth, firsthand, and
comparative look at the problem of implementation gaps, and offers many valuable lessons to a
range of readers.
To guide their work on VAWG/GBV, Oxfam country programs and partner organizations draw
upon a global framework, which is based on the need for transformative change that challenges
patriarchal power relations. The framework entails four major components or goals:
womens organizations working to reduce VAWG/GBV are supported by allies and funders
and are increasingly sustainable;
men and women in their communities and institutions have transformed the attitudes, norms,
and behaviors that perpetuate VAWG/GBV and acted to reduce the social acceptance of
VAWG/GBV;
duty-bearers have demonstrated their commitment to reducing VAWG/GBV and to
transformational change by protecting citizens through stronger legislation and policy, and
more effective implementation;
survivors are more effectively supported by service-providing institutions, and have
increasingly acted as change agents in their communities on VAWG/GBV.
This research project is focused primarily on the third component regarding duty-bearers, but its
results and the influencing efforts that it will help to strengthen will advance the other objectives
of Oxfams global framework as well. For instance, in light of the findings to be presented below,
Oxfam will continue to advocate for improvements to services for VAWG/GBV survivors and for
funding to WROs. As well as this, better enforcement and implementation of legislation
strengthens the message that VAWG/GBV is unacceptable, which supports changes in norms
and attitudes (UN Economic and Social Council, 2015).
The design and facilitation of this project was led by Oxfams Knowledge Hub on VAWG/GBV,
an initiative oriented toward resources and networking, intended to help Oxfam colleagues and
their partners worldwide who work on VAWG/GBV to improve the quality of their programming
and influencing, and to increase funding for their programs.8
VAWG violence starts early in life: 125 million girls and women alive today have undergone
female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), with two million girls a year at risk (UNICEF, 2013:
114). Every year, 60 million girls are sexually assaulted either at or while travelling to and from
school (Moosa et al., 2010: 7), yet violence can affect women and girls throughout their
lifetimes, and in any number of situations, including early and forced marriage, sexual violence
in dating relationships, sexual harassment in workplaces, domestic violence in marriages, and,
ultimately, femicide in such forms as dowry murder and honor killings (UNiTE to End Violence
Against Women, 2015). Over one third of murders of women are committed by male partners
(World Health Organization, 2014: 10).
Although all women and girls, worldwide, are at risk of GBV, certain circumstances elevate the
risk. For instance, sexual violence is a defining and deliberate tactic of armed conflict (Rosche,
2013); in some regions, over half of women with disabilities have experienced physical violence,
compared to one-third of women without disabilities (United Nations Secretary-General, 2006);
and Indigenous women are at much greater risk of femicide than non-Indigenous women
(United Nations Secretary-General, 2006). These facts reflect the multiple and uneven forms of
discrimination experienced by women and girls.
Uniting all women and girls in their experiences of VAWG, however, is the underlying root cause
of this violence: unequal gender power relations between women and girls on the one hand,
and men and boys on the other (Alexander-Scott et al., 2016; UN Women, 2013). VAWG is one
of the most enduring expressions of gender inequality, and is used as a tool to keep women and
girls in positions of inferiority when it comes to power, rights, well-being, and life opportunities.
VAWG is a violation of human rights that robs women of control over their own bodies and
dignity, and inflicts myriad physical, psychological, and emotional harms on survivors. These
include the direct results of incidents of violence, as well as longer-term trauma and mental
health consequences. VAWG can also have intergenerational impacts by causing pregnancy-
related and other reproductive health problems, and HIV/AIDS (World Health Organization,
2014). In addition, VAWG limits womens and girls choices and ability to access education,
earn a living, and participate in political and public life (Rosche, 2013).
In addition to the impacts on women and girls who experience violence, VAWG inflicts indirect
harms on everyone, and is a major constraint to the eradication of poverty. The economic costs
of responding to VAWG through health systems, social services, and justice systems are
enormous, in addition to losses in economic productivity and earnings, which are caused by
both the direct impacts of violence, and deficits in girls education.
All of these serve to increase the global recognition of VAWG as a form of discrimination, a
violation of human rights, an expression of gender inequality, and an obstacle to sustainable
development worldwide (The Advocates for Human Rights, 2011).
The DDP as applied to VAWG is established in several international and regional human rights
instruments13 and in national-level jurisprudence. For instance, the UN Declaration on the
Elimination of Violence against Women calls upon states to exercise due diligence to prevent
VAW, prosecute perpetrators, and provide compensation to victims (Ertrk, 2008).
Specifically, due diligence requires Five Ps (Abdul Aziz and Moussa, 2014):
1. prevention of VAWG;
2. protection of survivors and their dependants;
3. prosecution of perpetrators;
4. punishment that is sufficient and fair; and
5. provision of redress and reparations to survivors.
These obligations have both individual and systemic components (Manjoo, 2013). Individual
due diligence refers to the 5P obligations that states have toward individual survivors of
violence. Systemic due diligence refers to states obligations to create a sustainable, holistic,
functioning system that supports the elimination of violence on the societal level, both through
improvements to how institutions operate and the transformation of social norms and attitudes.
Reports over the past decade from the UN Special Rapporteurs on Violence against Women
have laid out the specific obligations of states; for instance, in the form of questions they should
address (Manjoo, 2013) or suggested indicators (Ertrk, 2008). What is required to fulfill the due
diligence standard will vary based on commitments made by states and their domestic contexts
(Ertrk, 2006). However, crucially, states have a duty to eliminate VAWG, and are responsible
for acts of VAWG if they fail to act with due diligence to prevent, protect against, investigate,
punish, and redress the same (Abdul Aziz and Moussa, 2014: 1).
In general, these laws make VAWG a criminal or civil offense, lay out punishments for
perpetrators, provide protection mechanisms for survivors, mandate new institutional
mechanisms and responsibilities, and order the provision of support services for survivors and
their dependants (de Silva de Alwis and Klugman, 2015; World Health Organization, 2014).
Specific elements and support services can include counselling, shelters, telephone hotlines,
protection orders, special police units and courts, and legal aid or representation (UN Economic
and Social Council, 2015).
These legislative developments mark a significant positive shift in global discourse and state
action, and major progress in establishing the right of women to live free of violence (de Silva
de Alwis and Klugman, 2015: 6). They follow from states commitments to regional and
international agreements (The World Bank, 2016; Richards and Haglund, 2015; Ertrk, 2008;
UN Economic and Social Council, 2015),15 but importantly, they also reflect the struggles and
strength of civil society, in particular of womens and feminist movements, which have been
pivotal in demanding that governments live up to the agreements they have ratified and to
reform legal frameworks (de Silva de Alwis and Klugman, 2015; Alexander-Scott et al., 2016;
and Weldon and Htun, 2013). Weldon and Htun (2013), for example, found that autonomous
feminist activism is a greater predictor of government action to address VAWG than the
presence of women legislators, impacts of political parties, or national wealth.
The existence of VAWG-related legislation is a critical component of the fight against violence
and enhancing womens and girls well-being more generally (World Health Organization, 2014;
Thomas et al., 2011; UN Women, 2012). Women who live in countries with domestic violence
laws have 7 percent lower odds of experiencing violence compared with women living in
countries without such laws (de Silva de Alwis and Klugman, 2015: 7), and womens life
expectancy is higher in countries with legal protections from domestic violence (The World
Bank, 2016).
The scope and strength of VAWG-related laws varies considerably across countries and are
subject to critique. Many laws are weak or incomplete. For instance: sexual harassment and
marital rape are less likely to be addressed than domestic violence and non-marital rape
(Richards and Haglund, 2015; World Health Organization, 2014); rape may not be punishable if
a survivor marries the perpetrator (Manjoo, 2013); there is often an over-emphasis on criminal
justice approaches, leaving prevention strategies insufficiently unaddressed; (de Silva de Alwis
and Klugman, 2015; Alexander-Scott et al., 2016); and victim compensation provisions are
relatively rare (World Health Organization, 2014). Stronger or more comprehensive legislation
covers all forms of VAWG, and mandates or provides for among other elements scalable
prevention strategies, monitoring mechanisms, a national action plan, and training for
implementing actors (UN Women, 2012).16
It must be acknowledged that even the best laws (on paper) are not sufficient to eliminate
VAWG (de Silva de Alwis and Klugman, 2015): there is mounting evidence that violations of
womens human rights remain unrelenting even in countries where legislative changes have
been introduced to address VAWG (Alexander-Scott et al.,2016: 35). One explanation is that
reducing the prevalence of VAWG requires more than laws; it demands comprehensive, multi-
pronged and multi-sectoral approaches, entailing a range of strategies and tackling a range of
contributing factors (World Health Organization, 2014; Alexander-Scott et al., 2016; Abdul Aziz
and Moussa, 2014; UN Women, 2013). Critically, these approaches must include efforts to
promote gender equality, and to change negative attitudes and social norms (World Health
Organization, 2014; Ertrk, 2008). VAWG must be made culturally and socially unacceptable,
not just illegal (World Health Organization, 2014).
The second reason that laws alone are not enough to eliminate VAWG and the focus of this
report is that they are often poorly implemented.
Implementation gaps
For legal frameworks to be as effective as they can be in the fight against VAWG, they must be
enforced and implemented well (Alexander-Scott, 2016 et al., 2016). For states to fulfill their due
diligence, any legal framework they establish to address VAWG must be put into practice
(Manjoo, 2013). However, the implementation of VAWG laws is woefully inadequate (Garca-
Moreno et al., 2014: 5; UN Women, 2012; Ertrk, 2006; UN Economic and Social Council,
2015), and this problem seems to pertain to VAWG laws more than laws on other topics (World
Health Organization, 2014).17
It is worth noting that the implementation of laws is different to their effectiveness (Weldon and
Htun, 2013). Effectiveness is about the extent to which the aims of the law in question have
been met, for instance, a reduction in the prevalence of VAWG. Implementation, the focus of
this report, is the process of enforcing or putting into action the provisions stipulated in the
legislation, and certainly contributes to effectiveness.18
Implementation gaps the failures and shortfalls between states legislative commitments and
on-the-ground realities have been identified by a number of organizations, experts, and
academics (e.g., UN Women, 2012; Manjoo, 2013; Abdul Aziz and Moussa, 2014; Ertrk, 2008,
2006; UN Economic and Social Council, 2015). The gaps tend to fall into two main categories of
activity: law enforcement and criminal justice processes, and the provision of services and
resources to survivors and their dependants. Implementation gaps also pertain to prevention
efforts, to the extent that the legislation includes these.
In relation to law enforcement and criminal justice, a sampling of the types of implementation
gaps includes:
police fail to properly register cases of VAWG, for instance, dismissing womens complaints
or referring women directly to NGOs;
the arrest and prosecution of both the victim and perpetrator;
protocols for investigating acts of violence are not followed, e.g., police officers do not collect
evidence properly, or lawyers promote mediation and family reunification;
protection orders are difficult to access or not enforced;
women are not given the proper accompaniment or information to navigate legal processes;
judges dismiss VAWG cases for lack of evidence, or afford cases insufficient importance;
punishments do not fit the crime.
In the area of service and resource provision, survivors and their dependants may encounter
the following implementation gaps, among others:
non-existent, inaccessible, inadequately staffed, low-quality, or poorly resourced shelters,
medical clinics, hotlines, counselling services, one-stop centers, secondary housing, etc.;
The case studies from the participant countries in this study will document types of
implementation gaps in more detail, but suffice to say that laws on paper do not reflect womens
and girls realities of access to justice and to services (The World Bank, 2016).
The issue of political will merits brief elaboration, as some care needs to be taken with the term.
It is sometimes over-used as a catch-all explanation, which can prevent a closer examination of
specifically where or with whom the problems lie, or it is defined too narrowly as political
leadership, which can mask the fact that change happens as a result of a number of different
impetuses and actors (Green, 2009). This report draws on the definition of political will as the
states prioritization of VAWG as a critical concern, and the allocation of sufficient budget and
other resources to realize the objective of eliminating it (Abdul Aziz and Moussa, 2014: 12). It
requires but should not be reduced to strong political and institutional leadership at the
highest levels of government.
Based on these reasons for implementation gaps, several studies have highlighted what is
needed for improved and adequate implementation of VAWG legislation (e.g., Ertrk, 2008;
To fully realize the potential of the Due Diligence Principle in relation to VAWG, and for laws to
play a more impactful role in eliminating VAWG, states must comply with the obligations they
have set out for themselves by fully implementing these laws, and they should do so through
meaningful collaboration with WROs in particular (Ertrk, 2006). Only in this way can
sustainable progress be made towards a conception of human rights compatible with our
aspirations for a just world free of violence (Ertrk, 2006: article 102).
Project design
Before research began, the Oxfam VAWG/GBV Knowledge Hub carried out a consultative
project design and planning phase guided by an advisory group which included the selection
of participant countries.19 Countries were selected using a number of practical and strategic
considerations, including geographic representativeness, feasibility of conducting the research,
and usefulness and relevance of the research to Oxfam country offices VAWG/GBV work.
It was intended that this project adopt a comparative approach that would allow best practices
in legislation implementation to be highlighted. To that end, country selection entailed the
inclusion of two positive deviance countries from the Global South Burkina Faso and the
Dominican Republic.
Several resources were consulted, from which Burkina Faso and the Dominican Republic
emerged as having better-than-average implementation records. For instance, Burkina Faso
has been praised by the World Futures Council for the implementation of provisions of its penal
code that prohibit female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) (Heisecke and Werner, 2014).
Within the Latin America and Caribbean region, the Dominican Republic has been
acknowledged for positive efforts by the government in collaboration with NGOs to reduce rates
of VAWG, especially femicides (Global Foundation for Democracy and Development
(GFDD)/Fundacin Global Democracia y Desarrollo (FUNGLODE), 2014).
The other five participant countries were Benin, Bolivia, India, Malawi, and Nicaragua, where
Oxfam country offices confirmed the problem of implementation gaps in VAWG legislation, and
affirmed that the research was both feasible and needed.
In conversation with the Knowledge Hub, each Oxfam country office identified a specific piece
of VAWG legislation on which to focus, one that had been enacted long enough ago to assess
its implementation, and one whose implementation had been subject to critique.
Research in Burkina Faso and the Dominican Republic focused on which aspects of
implementation efforts had gone well and why, and on providing lessons for actors in other
countries, while the focus of research in the remaining five countries was primarily on
implementation shortfalls and the reasons for them.
The country-based research consisted of desk research and interviews. Desk research included
a literature review, policy analysis, and identification of possible interview respondents. The
Guided by the literature review and policy analysis, the researchers conducted interviews with
four or five groups: government (politicians and bureaucrats/civil servants), CSOs, law
enforcement, the judiciary, and traditional leaders (if feasible/applicable). Respondents were
identified from both the lists generated by the researchers, and through snowball sampling.
The interview process was guided by a set of standardized lines of questioning for each group
of actors20 to ensure that comparable information was collected across the seven countries. The
interviews were semi-structured; researchers addressed a standard set of themes but tailored
the questions to respondents and contexts. The overall themes for all interviews were:
a respondent and organizational profile;
knowledge of the law/policy and how it was developed;
involvement in implementation;
assessment of implementation successes and shortfalls;
funding/budget for implementation;
monitoring of implementation;
involvement in influencing for improved implementation.
In most of the countries, the interview questions were translated into local languages and re-
worded as necessary.
The interview process adhered to research ethics protocols. Researchers sought from all
respondents their consent to participate, either in written or oral form, having first provided them
with an overview of the project, and information about: their rights as participants, how
participating could affect them, how confidentiality would be addressed, and how information
provided would be used. Researchers offered participants the option of personal and/or
organizational anonymity, and asked for permission to audio record the interview.
In all, 117 interviews were conducted across the seven countries, with a total of 123
respondents.
Following the interviews, researchers transcribed recordings or wrote up detailed notes,
assigning numbers or codenames to respondents who had requested personal and/or
organizational anonymity. Researchers then carried out a thematic qualitative data analysis,
while taking note of illustrative quotes.
The combination of desk research and interviews culminated in a country report from each
research team, according to a template provided, again to facilitate a comparative synthesis.
Research challenges
As with most research projects, limitations and challenges were encountered that will have
affected the results. These are due to both the choices made in designing the research, and to
circumstances that arose in the course of the research, as outlined below.
Benin
Benin is a small West African coastal nation of 10.6 million people, over half of which (51.6
percent) live below the income poverty line (UNDP, 2015a). It ranks 166 of 190 countries on the
Human Development Index (HDI), and has a Gender Inequality Index (GII) of 0.614 (UNDP,
2015a).24
According to available statistics from the past seven years, the prevalence of VAW in Benin is
staggering: 69 percent of Beninese women have experienced some form of VAW in their
lifetime (DPFG, 2012: 20). Of these, 86 percent have experienced verbal/psychological
violence, 76 percent physical violence, and 44 percent sexual violence (Project EMPOWER,
2008: 37). In some regions, as many as 85 percent of women have experienced deprivation of
liberty, meaning their mobility, actions, or decisions (e.g., to work or study) are significantly
restricted or controlled by male partners (DPFG, 2012: 19). The governments Centers for
Social Promotion (CPS) received 14,479 cases of VAW in 2013 and 10,850 cases in 2014
(DPFG, 2014: 69), numbers which are discussed briefly below.
Research in Benin focused on Law 2011-26 of January 9, 2012 on the Prevention and
Suppression of Violence against Women25 (hereafter Law 2011-26). The objective of the law is
to bring a multidisciplinary response to VAW, including prevention, protection, and punishment.
It is not easy to generalize about the implementation of Law 2011-26 because its text is so
comprehensive, and because the research noted various degrees of failure and success in
implementation. This profile presents both successes and shortcomings, according to each of
the four main sections of Law 2011-26.
Awareness-raising, prevention, and detection:
a significant amount of education and training has been done with implementing actors and
other institutional leaders (e.g., religious leaders, journalists), but systematic and continuous
training for social services, health, and judicial sectors is still lacking;
the specialization of judges in VAW has been partially implemented, but in jurisdictions with
large caseloads, VAW cases are often assigned to non-specialized judges;
the stipulation that a womans testimony can be used as evidence tends to be applied only to
non-criminal types of VAW. In cases of rape, other types of evidence are required, unless
the woman wants to re-categorize the act to a less serious offense, which problematically
downplays the violence and lessens the punishment;
police officers have been criticized for being insensitive and for downplaying VAW cases,
and staff in the judicial system may encourage women to drop their cases.
Institutional framework:
there are new public policies on VAW, including a multi-sector action plan; however,
reporting to the National Assembly on the implementation of Law 2011-26 has not yet
begun;
despite the SOPs, there is no adequate structure to coordinate the actions of the sectors and
actors involved in addressing VAW; because of this, interventions tend to be fragmented.
Benin can be commended for the progress made in some aspects of the implementation of Law
2011-26. Indeed, the high number of VAW cases reported in 2013 (14,479) is in part attributable
to an awareness-raising campaign that followed the enactment of the law in 2012, which
resulted in more women reporting. (The drop in 2014, however, to 10,850 reported cases, has
been blamed in part on women no longer using the CPS offices because staff there were not
able to keep up with demand for services). Oxfam in Benin has played a key role in demanding
that the government live up to its commitments. By 2013, the government still had not published
Law 2011-26 in the Official Journal or passed any decrees to facilitate implementation. To
pressure the state, Oxfam in Benin launched a campaign in March 2013 under the slogan, The
Law on VAW is Enacted, Lets Have the Decrees!
A national survey about women in Bolivia indicates that 44 percent of women have experienced
psychological violence, 36 percent have experienced physical violence, and 15 percent sexual
violence (Coordinadora de la Mujer, et al., 2014: 102). According to information from the
Ministry of Government, in 2015 alone, 42,061 VAW-related crimes were reported (Ministerio de
Gobierno, 2016). A significantly higher percentage of Indigenous than non-Indigenous women
have experienced VAW (54 percent vs. 39 percent) (Coordinadora de la Mujer, et al., 2014:
107).The research in Bolivia also examined political violence against women (defined in
endnote 23) of which almost 300 reports were made between 2010 and 2014 (ACOBOL, 2014:
1).
Bolivia was the only country in the study where two pieces of VAW legislation were examined:
Law 348, the Comprehensive Law to Guarantee Women a Life Free from Violence (2013)28
includes 16 types of VAW. It establishes mechanisms, measures, and policies for the
prevention of VAW, response to VAW (through attention, protection, and reparation for
women), and the persecution and punishment of perpetrators.
Law 243, the Law against Political Harassment and Violence against Women (2012)29
targets violence against women who participate in political life as candidates, elected
officials, and bureaucrats, among others. It contains provisions to prevent and punish acts of
political harassment or violence, support victims, and nullify any action carried out by women
as a result of political harassment or violence.
The analysis of implementation of Law 348 focused on la ruta crtica,30 the critical path or
process women can follow after experiences of violence. There are serious deficiencies here.
According to an interview with a member of the Alianza Libres de Violencia, an organization that
has monitored the application of the Due Diligence Principle and of Law 348 in Bolivia, only 1.7
percent of reported cases in 2015 were prosecuted and only 0.25 percent resulted in
sentencing. There are three stages or entry points in la ruta crtica, and shortfalls were found
with each one, as outlined below.
Municipal Comprehensive Legal Services (SLIMs) These centers are mandated to receive
reports of violence, and provide medical and other support services, including the
preparation of complaints for the Attorney-General.
Complete services are rarely available in rural areas, and only 30 percent of municipalities
have begun constructing womens shelters. Existing urban services need improvements,
especially permanent, specialized staff.
Special Force for the Fight Against VAW (FELCV), part of the National Police Officers are
supposed to write up reports bound for the Attorney-General, give women information, and
accompany them to a medical center if needed.
Many officers act on the basis of prejudices and often re-victimize women. It is also reported
that officers falsely state that, if women sign their complaints, those complaints cannot be
retracted and perpetrators will surely be tried and sentenced to prison. Out of fear and
uncertainty, many women decide not to sign complaints.
The Office of the Attorney-General (A-G) (public prosecutor) If a woman has a lawyer, she
can go directly here. The A-G refers cases to a Public Prosecutor Specialized in Violence
(FEPVA), who assigns police investigators and is supposed to provide women (and children)
with 14 measures of protection. The investigation must not require the active participation of
the victim, and can only take a maximum of eight days.
If cases do reach the court, there are not enough judges specialized in VAW. Even specialized
ones often show ignorance about VAW and gender issues, and judge cases based on their own
personal values and conceptions.
There are some successes to note regarding the implementation of Law 348, however: the
Ministry of Communication has raised awareness about the Law and available services; the
Ministry of Education has approved a protocol for handling cases of sexual violence in
educational settings, and has plans to include violence prevention themes in curricula; and the
Ministry of Health has designed a special certificate to be provided by any medical center to a
woman who has experienced violence, for easier access to other services.
However, since Law 243 was passed in 2012, only 72 of the 272 reports of political violence or
harassment have resulted in legal action, and of these, only 13 cases have been resolved, none
of which resulted in criminal proceedings (ACOBOL, 2014: 1). A key implementation gap is the
lack of protective measures for victims, which puts them at risk of further aggression from
perpetrators.
Many of the same reasons for implementation shortfalls of Law 243 also apply with respect to
Law 348, but these shortfalls are compounded by a lack of both regulation to accompany the
law and protection for women who report, and the number of bureaucratic and expensive
procedures needed to enforce the law.
India
The second most populous country in the world, India has a population of 1.21 billion people
(UNDP 2015a). Almost a quarter 23.6 percent of its residents live below the income poverty
line. It ranks 130 on the HDI, and scores 0.563 on the GII (UNDP 2015a).
The third round of the Indian National Family Health Survey 3 (NFHS) conducted in 200506
found that 39.7 percent of ever-married women aged 1549 years have faced some form of
domestic violence (International Institute for Population Sciences and Macro International, 2007:
509). More recently, a study by the International Center for Research on Women reported that
Research in India focused on the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act (PWDVA).
Domestic violence is criminalized in India by the penal code. The PWDVA, passed in 2005, is
civil legislation. While some see this as a weakness, or question the need for parallel legislation,
the PWDVA provides important avenues of access to justice and services for women who may
not want to proceed with a criminal prosecution. Furthermore, it makes the definitions of
domestic violence more comprehensive than the penal code, for instance, including economic
and emotional forms of abuse.
The provisions of the PWDVA that the research investigated relate to reporting processes, civil
court proceedings, and provision of services to women who experience violence. To lodge a
complaint under this Act, a woman or her representative contacts a protection officer (PO) who
is supposed to inform her about her rights, connect her to the court and to service providers, do
a small investigation of the case, and write up a domestic incident report (DIR). The PO has to
submit the DIR to the court within three days of receiving the complaint, and the court must
pronounce judgment within 60 days of receiving the DIR.
The implementation weaknesses have significant implications for the availability and quality of
services for women who have experienced domestic violence.
The state governments are not appointing enough independent, full-time POs, especially at
the sub-district level. POs tend to be hired on contract, or have PWDVA implementation
added to their existing responsibilities.
Many states have not formally appointed service providers a process called notification
or have made these appointments without augmenting services providers resources, or
even informing them.
While the Act defines roles and procedures, they do not seem to have been effectively
communicated to stakeholders. For instance, police respondents were unaware of their role
or responsibilities under the Act, and POs may not know about the service providers to which
they can refer women.
Many actors POs, police officials, medical practitioners, and magistrates do not
understand domestic violence issues, are insensitive or disrespectful, or blame victims. And
POs and police officials often dissuade women from filing cases.
In most districts, the only services available are shelter homes and women in more remote
areas may not even have access to these and most do not offer other immediate services
that women may need.
The average time for a court to make a judgment on a DIR is 275 days in the Odisha region,
and non-compliance with court orders is very high because no effective mechanisms exist to
ensure they are enforced.
The research revealed a set of key reasons that explain these implementation gaps.
It was suggested that implementation of the PWDVA and the issue of domestic violence
more generally is not a governmental priority.
Low levels of awareness about the PWDVA, which contributes to the difficulties women
experience in accessing justice and services, and to their reluctance to report violence.
Attitudes, beliefs, and social norms, which contribute to unhelpful behavior by some
implementing actors. For instance, police officers often just attribute domestic violence to
alcohol problems, and judges have been reported to handle civil domestic violence cases
less urgently than other types because they believe these cases weaken their career
portfolios.
Malawi
Malawi is a landlocked country in south-east Africa with a population of 17 million people (The
World Bank, 2016), and 72 percent of its residents living below the income poverty line (UNDP
2015a). It ranks 173 on the HDI and scores 0.611 on the GII (UNDP 2015a).
The research undertaken in Malawi focused on domestic violence. According to the 2012 official
survey data on GBV, 25 percent of respondents had experienced physical violence (of whom 64
percent were women), and 35 percent of respondents had experienced sexual violence (of
whom 61 percent were women) (National Statistical Office of Malawi, UNFPA and UN Women,
2013: np). The vast majority of these incidents occurred in the home. Representatives from
CSOs interviewed for the research emphasized the high prevalence of economic and
psychological/emotional forms of domestic violence.
The legislation focused on in Malawi was the Prevention of Domestic Violence Act (PDVA),
enacted in 2006. This Act seeks to prevent domestic violence, and to provide protection,
services, and legal remedies to persons affected.
Although the PDVA defines domestic violence as a criminal offense, it is not criminal legislation
and does not prescribe punishments for perpetrators. Instead, it provides for various legal
remedies, including protection orders, occupation orders, and tenancy orders; and for services
including counselling, shelter, food, and medical care. It mandates duties of the police, the
judiciary, the Minister of Gender, and non-governmental service providers. The PDVA is
accompanied by two sets of guidelines: for One-Stop Centers, and for Victim Support Units
(VSUs) of the police.
Some progress on implementation of the PDVA was noted in Malawi, including: some public
awareness-raising (e.g., pamphlets about the PDVA in local languages); some training of
implementing actors; some provision of legal aid; new construction of VSUs and One-Stop
Centers; better coordination among actors; and some community by-laws.
Despite these markers of progress, the PDVA has suffered from significant implementation
challenges, of which the research emphasizes the following:
limited use of protection, occupation, and tenancy orders: for instance, VSUs often refer
cases to the court for divorce proceedings or to alternative dispute resolution, and there are
significant judicial delays in processing these orders;
insufficient enforcement of court orders;
poor service provision and infrastructure: most VSU offices do not handle complaints
confidentially or provide basic provisions of temporary shelter; One-Stop Centers are not
present in all regions, or not all services are offered in one place; there are not enough
rehabilitation centers or temporary shelters, and some are populated by people other than
survivors of violence, or staff do not have the capacity to assist survivors; and counselling
services are poor or non-existent.
Nicaragua
Nicaragua is a Spanish-speaking Central American nation of just over six million people. It
ranks 125 on the HDI and has a GII of 0.449 (UNDP 2015a).
Statistics on VAW in Nicaragua are available from both official reports and surveys. In 2014
alone, the Attorney-General received over 51,000 cases of VAW, and categorized 38 cases of
murders of women as femicide (Ministerio Pblico de Nicaragua, 2014: 10, 19). A demographic
and health survey conducted in 2011/12 found that one in four urban women and one in five
rural women had experienced physical or sexual violence, and almost half of urban women and
over a quarter of rural women had experienced verbal or psychological violence (INIDE and
MINSA, 2013: 42).
The research focused on Law 779: Comprehensive Law against Violence against Women and
Reforms to Law 641, the Penal Code,31 passed in January 2012, and subsequent reforms. Law
779 was created in response to the government of Nicaraguas commitment to international
human rights instruments, and the advocacy of the Nicaraguan womens movement.
Law 779 aims to protect the rights of women by guaranteeing them a life free from violence. It
sets out measures of assistance, protection, punishment, and prevention, and identifies the
appropriate actors of la ruta de atencin (the support route).32 It outlines the responsibilities of
the judiciary, a unit of the Attorney-General specialized in GBV, a police commission for women
and children, and a new National Inter-institutional Commission for the Fight Against VAW.
Law 779 was accompanied by the Model of Comprehensive Assistance to Women Victims of
Gender-based Violence in Nicaragua (MAI), a set of guidelines and procedures for the
institutional actors involved in womens access to justice and services.
In 2013 and 2014, reforms were made to Law 779.33 The Reforms overturned the prohibition of
mediation between survivor and perpetrator, gave the President power to regulate the law, and
restricted the definition of femicide to acts occurring only in intimate relationships. Overall, the
reforms promoted a more family-based understanding of violence.
Despite these positive aspects, there are some weaknesses in the implementation of Law 779
and the Reforms. First, the Reforms have made the implementation of Law 779 somewhat more
complicated, leading to confusion among institutional actors, and changes to the process for
women seeking help. For instance, when women go to the police commission wanting to report
violence, they are often told they have to go first to a government office run by the Ministry of
the Family, or police may encourage women to mediate or reconcile with their partners.
Some of the reasons for these challenges have to do with complexities caused by the Reforms
to Law 779, but there are other explanations, such as:
inadequate coordination among actors, and exclusion of womens organizations;
insufficient financial resources, especially for shelter services;
weaknesses in monitoring and evaluation: Law 779 assigned responsibility to the inter-
institutional commission, whereas the regulations following the Reforms assigned it to the
Ministry of the Family. A monitoring observatory has also been set up, but there is some
question about whether it is fully operational;
insufficient knowledge of the law: the government has conducted effective awareness-raising
activities, but these have focused more on the Reforms than on Law 779.
The research in Burkina Faso focused on female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), specifically
cutting.34 Data from Burkina Fasos National Action Plan on FGM/C found in 2013 that 61
percent of women and girls surveyed (aged zero to 60 years, with mothers reporting for girls
younger than 15 years of age) had experienced FGM/C. Most cutting occurs between the ages
of one and four years (SP/CNLPE, 2014: 12). The vast majority of those performing FGM/C are
poorly educated women, without medical training, who perform cutting to earn an income. The
procedure is usually performed under non-sterile conditions, which poses additional health
threats beyond those caused by the procedure itself.
Burkina Faso is one of two positive deviance countries in this research project. In a recent
report, the World Futures Council commended Burkina Faso for the implementation of revisions
to its penal code in 1996 that criminalized FGM/C, noting declines in prevalence rates, and
increases in arrests and sentences (Heisecke and Werner, 2014).
Research in Burkina Faso examined the implementation of these penal code provisions, found
in Law No. 043/96/ADP of 13 November 1996 on the Penal Code35 (hereafter Law 043/96).
Three articles in particular 380, 381, and 382 address FGM/C and lay out fines (up to
900,000 FCFA, or CAD $2000) and imprisonment terms (up to ten years). These punishments
apply to those who commit or attempt to commit FGM/C including accomplices and those
who were found to be aware of an act of FGM/C but did not notify authorities.
A state-led, multi-sector institution called the National Council for the Fight against the Practice
of Excision (CNLPE) had been established in 1990, made up of representatives from
government, civil society, and traditional and religious leaders. The Permanent Secretariat of
the CNLPE (SP-CNLPE) was created in 1997, led by the Ministry of Social Action and National
Solidarity.36 It assumed responsibility for the implementation of the penal code provisions, as
part of a wider mandate that includes coordination, awareness-raising and training, prevention,
research, resource mobilization, and reparations for women and girls who have been cut.
For ten years after Law 043/96 was passed, enforcement was relatively weak. Among the cases
tried in court, there were too many suspended sentences and instances of reoffending. These
cases highlighted the lack of appropriate facilities for female prisoners, and the problems with
incarcerating older women and mothers of young children. The lack of real punishment sent
the message that cutters had done nothing wrong.
More recently, other positive developments include adoption of a mayors charter, a National
Action Plan (201417) to implement FGM/C-related recommendations from the United Nations
Universal Periodic Review in 2013, and a new comprehensive VAWG law was passed in 2015
that criminalizes cultural violence (although it does not name FGM/C explicitly).38
However, these statistics must be read with considerable doubt and caution, and they point to
some of the challenges in implementing the FGM/C provisions of Law 043/96. One is the issue
of reporting. People may be dissuaded from doing so because they are more aware of the
punishments contained in Law 043/96 (SP/CNLPE, 2014). Furthermore, those who report
FGM/C often face marginalization or backlash in their communities, and are afforded no
protection from authorities. So while it may appear that prevalence is decreasing, it could be
that the focus on criminalization, coupled with social norms in support of FGM/C, have had the
negative effects of reducing reporting and making the practice more clandestine.
In addition to issues of reporting, the relatively low numbers of tried cases and prison terms
have been attributed to other problems with the implementation of the penal provisions,
especially corruption in the handling of cases, and difficulties with incarcerating female cutters,
an issue which merits more discussion. There are no adequate, separate prison arrangements
for female prisoners, and a few research respondents recommended that this infrastructure be
improved. This is a contentious recommendation, however, because it emphasizes the
criminalization of female cutters, who, from a certain perspective, can be seen as victims, i.e.,
pushed by social norms, community leaders, and men to continue a practice that they may not
personally support. (On the other hand, they can be seen as acting with agency, pursuing an
income by performing a practice that is still accepted, where there are few other income-earning
opportunities.)
Among the challenges for prevention, the research emphasized that interventions often do not
address the behind-the-scenes involvement of men in perpetuating the practice, that parents
often have FGM/C performed in neighboring countries where the practice is not illegal or where
laws are more weakly enforced, and that there are concerns about sustainable funding for
eliminating FGM/C in the absence of the UNFPA-UNICEF program, which is in its last year.
Dominican Republic
The second positive deviance country in the study, Dominican Republic is a mostly Spanish-
speaking Caribbean island nation with a population of approximately 10.5 million people, of
which 40 percent live below the poverty line (The World Bank, 2016). It ranks 101 on the HDI
and has a GII of 0.477 (UNDP, 2015a).
More than one-quarter of Dominican women (aged 1549) have experienced physical violence,
and 10 percent sexual violence (CESDEM and MSP, 2014: 318, 323). Rates are higher among
less-educated and poorer women, and among pregnant adolescents (Ibid.). The Dominican
Republic also has the third highest rate of femicide in the Latin America and Caribbean region
(CEPAL, 2014).
Although VAWG continues to be prevalent in the country, government efforts to eliminate and
address VAWG have been well-documented and recognized at the regional and international
levels. Research examined the implementation of Law 24-97 that Presents Modifications to the
Penal Code, Code of Criminal Proceedings, and Code for the Protection of Boys, Girls, and
Adolescents (hereafter Law 24-97),39 enacted in January 1997. The research focused
specifically on reforms to the Penal Code that criminalized GBV, intra-familial violence, and
sexual violence against women.
Law 24-97 is a piece of criminal legislation, except for the protection orders it mandates, which
are civil in nature. Punishments are jail time and/or fines. The law has some shortcomings and
was not accompanied by budgetary resources, but among its strengths, Law 24-97 names and
defines many types of GBV, and calls for rehabilitation measures for perpetrators. On the
whole, the law is recognized as a success for womens rights. The government was driven by
political commitments such as its 1996 ratification of the Convention of Belem do Par but
pressure by well-organized feminist and womens movements40 was pivotal in ensuring that Law
24-97 passed. Law 24-97 also contributed to several subsequent legal reforms related to
gender, womens rights, and VAWG.
Other positive practices have resulted from Law 24-97, including: a review of the sentences in
VAW cases; training of judges in gender mainstreaming and about errors committed most often
in the adjudication of VAW cases; and publication of materials by different government offices,
intended for use in awareness-raising and training with women at the community level.
Part of the explanation for the strengths in the implementation of Law 24-97 could be that it has
existed for 20 years, much longer than any other law examined in this research, with the
exception of Burkina Faso. However, the analysis reveals two key contributing factors.
First, multi-stakeholder coordination and cooperation, especially between and among
government ministries, support the implementation of Law 24-97. As continued proof of this,
in a coordinated effort to further improve upon Law 24-97, several government departments
have worked on the development of a new Bill for the Prevention, Punishment, and
Eradication of Violence Against Women. It was introduced to Congress in 2013, but, at the
time of writing, has not yet been passed.
The second is the fact that civil society and feminist organizations have worked tirelessly and
in a highly coordinated way for the implementation of Law 24-97. They have lobbied and
worked with the government, and called public attention to the governments obligations. The
effectiveness of these organizations can be attributed to their capacity to mobilize, influence,
train, and share good practices; their creativity in awareness-raising; and the creation of
inter-sectoral and inter-institutional networks through which they have become sought-after
experts for the government.
Although the Dominican Republic figures in this study as a positive example, implementation
shortfalls also emerged in the research, including:
insufficient involvement and coordination among other institutions that should be involved,
such as Public Health and the Minister of Education;
over-emphasis on domestic violence, to the detriment of addressing other types of VAW;
the body responsible for monitoring the success and impacts of Law 24-97 the National
Commission for the Prevention and Fight against Intra-familial Violence not being
sufficiently effective;
women who experience violence not receiving any compensation.
This brings the risk of downplaying sexual crimes because the perpetrator is not
punished to the same degree for a sexual misdemeanour as for a sexual crime. To
de-criminalize a crime is to deny and renounce the crime; it also denies and
renounces the victim.
Benin report
In Bolivia, women are often granted none of the required measures of protection. They are
asked to participate in investigations, which is unlawful, and investigations take, on average,
22 days longer than required.
The public prosecutor does not use any of the 18 measures of protection
measures that should be used to protect the victim from further attack. Here there is
a lack of knowledge among prosecutors about the nature of violence and a disregard
for the inherent dangers.
Bolivia report
In India and Malawi, one of the first steps in preparing actors to implement the law is to
inform them that they are required to do so and what their responsibilities are. This process
of notification or gazetting is to generate a list of stakeholders and service providers so
that referrals can also be made. There are serious deficiencies here. For instance, in Malawi:
Service providers are not gazetted as provided under the Act. If they were gazetted,
they would make a great difference as they would be oriented on what is expected of
them, the list would be available to all stakeholders to share with the masses and
they could also be held accountable.
A member of the Ministry of Gender, Malawi
Also in Malawi, law enforcement actors too often neglect their duties under the PDVA, for
instance, merely referring cases to court for divorce proceedings, or not enforcing court
orders.
The lack of separate quarters for women in most prisons, as well as their age and
status as mothers of young children or nursing, prevents their incarceration, which
explains the high number of suspended sentences.
Burkina Faso report
In India, the only infrastructure available is shelter homes, though these are only found in
larger urban areas, and they often do not offer women the basic services they may need.
Furthermore, protection officers and police officials frequently are left with no options as to
where to refer women.
We cannot keep women in the police station after sunset and here we have shelter
homes in towns only, not in villages.
A police officer, India
Where will she and the kids go? She has to wait until the court orders [are issued]
which takes time
A police officer, India
In Malawi, there are significant shortages of temporary shelters, counselling services, and
One-Stop Centers that offer comprehensive services.
You come [to a judicial police officer], you say, He slapped me. Hes going to say,
A simple slap, thats what made you come here? Or you say, I was raped. And he
says, Well now! What do you mean? I need to be convinced of that, Ill need to do a
test myself to see what has resulted.
A legal practitioner, Benin
There is a systemic effort to dissuade her from filing a case. [The police] have also
defended it as something done in the interest of the woman herself, to shield her
from a long and tedious legal battle. A police officer state[d]: Our first priority is to
get a patch up done. We dont want a bad ending for marriage.
A police officer, India
In Bolivia, police procedures tend to re-victimize women, and judges show considerable
ignorance about VAW and gender issues:
The police officers that receive the report they dont proceed according to the law
offering dignified treatment to victims; instead they act on the basis of prejudice
and in actual fact re-victimize those who report because they make them go
[mentally and emotionally] through the instances of abuse.
Bolivia report
Reason Country
Burkina Dominican
Benin Bolivia India Malawi Nicaragua
Faso Republic
Insufficient financial
resources
Insufficient awareness
and training among
implementing actors
Lack of coordination or
role clarity among
implementing actors
Harmful attitudes,
social norms, and
cultural practices
Low political will
Staffing and workload
issues among
implementing actors
Content or complexity
of the law (or related
legal instruments)
Insufficient public
awareness of the law
Insufficient monitoring
and evaluation of
implementation
1. Financial resources
All seven countries in the project have experienced shortages in the financial resources
required to implement their VAWG laws. Several interview respondents representing
government ministries, law enforcement, and CSOs lamented that they simply do not have the
resources to carry out their obligations.
It is difficult to discern what has been budgeted let alone spent on implementation of VAWG
laws, because in most countries, there was either no financial commitment from the government
to accompany the legislation in question, funds to be spent on VAWG were subsumed within
other law enforcement or social services budgets, or funding allocations had not been fulfilled.
In Malawi, despite having specific mandates under the PDVA, state actors interviewed for
the research had not received any specific funding from the government for implementing
the Act. To fund VSUs, the police rely on the community policing budget line, but little goes
towards the VSUs from 30,000 to 100,000 Kwacha (USD 41 to 138) per month as the
priority is placed on other crime related issues. Community social welfare offices receive
100,000 to 200,000 Kwacha (USD 138 to 176) per month, for all office functions.
In Benin, the government ministry (MFASSNHPTA) in which the key institutional
implementing actors are located receives only 1 percent of the whole national budget:
How to lead a national plan to fight VAWG when the budget is the smallest of all
ministries, and it has to support [issues of] the family, social action, national
solidarity, people with disabilities, and senior citizens?
Benin report
You have victims that come with nothing, they dont have any money. They have
nothing at all and we are supposed to give them First Aid, and were limited, we
dont have the means for that.
A service provider, Benin
In India, when the PWDVA was passed, there was no commitment from the central
government to allocate funds to the state level for the implementation of the Act. Civil society
continuously lobbied the central government from December 2012 to March 2013, and
submitted a detailed implementation plan (Centrally Sponsored Scheme) to the National
Commission for Women (NCW),42 including a demand for Rs. 1,158 crores annually for
PWDVA implementation.43 As a result, the central government made budgetary
commitments to the Ministry of Women and Child Development for the next three fiscal years
(the highest was Rs. 67.5 crores in 201314). However, the Ministry did not use any of the
funds allocated in 201314 or 201415 (despite requests for information, it is unclear
whether the funds were actually transferred from the central government), and after a
change of national government in 2015, there was absolutely no allocation for PWDVA
implementation in 201516 in the Ministrys budget statement.
In the absence of sufficient government funding, nearly all of the seven countries have benefited
from funding from international NGOs, government aid organizations, and UN agencies to
support the implementation of VAWG laws.
In Burkina Faso, as outlined above, a joint UNICEF-UNFPA program on FGM/C has been
running for over eight years.
The Benin country report made several mentions of international support that has enabled
the training of implementing actors, coalition-building among WROs and CSOs, school-
based prevention programs, and service provision. For instance, Project Empower II
funded by USAID aims to strengthen the capacity of national and local service
organizations to provide emergency assistance to those who experience VAWG.
In Malawi, some police units receive funding from UNICEF and the EU for the provision of
shelters, and social welfare offices have benefited from the Gender Equality and Womens
Empowerment program (a joint UNFPA-EU initiative), totalling USD 600,000 per year, which
ended in 2016.
Although this funding is making initiatives possible that otherwise would not be, questions arose
regarding the sustainability of this support, and low levels of coordination among an increasingly
crowded field of actors, an issue that is addressed below.
I sometimes have to re-read the law to a judicial police officer. We have judges that also
dont know the content of the law. So, the first difficulty is the lack of awareness at the
level of actors that have to apply this law.
A service provider, Benin
Research in most countries found evidence of at least some training of key implementing
actors, in some instances with the involvement of WROs. However, training must be
continuously conducted and in many cases repeated, as high levels of staff turnover are
common, as a result of short-term, project-funded contracts, low levels of pay, and the low
levels of prestige attributed to working on VAWG issues, particularly by law enforcement actors.
In relation to the manner in which officials carry out their required responsibilities, there is a
significant concern about the inappropriate treatment received by women who have
experienced violence. This issue is addressed in more detail in the discussion of attitudes and
norms below (point 4), but training is a key component of proper treatment of survivors. Actors
that interact directly with survivors have often not been properly educated about VAWG, what
survivors need, and the dangers of victim-blaming and re-victimization.
In India, for instance, there is insufficient cooperation among actors involved in court orders:
At many places, cases of domestic violence are still filed at a police station without police
directing the woman to a protection officer, protection officers are often not informed
about the court orders on the Domestic Incident Reports, and service providers do not
coordinate with protection officers or the judiciary [T]here are no clear directives or
effective guidelines for coordination, which hampers a synchronized response to provide
relief.
India report
Research in Benin highlighted relatively good efforts at coalition building and development of
standard operating procedures thanks in large part to international funding but also the
challenge presented when individual organizations or initiatives do not cooperate or share
information sufficiently with each other. One NGO respondent shared this comment:
My assessment, and its with a lot of resentment, is that the NGOs are not open [to
collaboration]. Its as if each one wants to guard their domain like their own private turf.
There is no communication, there is no synergy among all the actions, and in the end the
fight [against VAWG] lacks effectiveness on the ground.
CSO representative, Benin
Another important factor to ensure good coordination and collaboration is the involvement of the
appropriate actors at the relevant stages of the process. The research in Nicaragua
encountered weaknesses in this regard. Many CSOs especially WROs feel that they have
not been consulted or sufficiently involved in coordination of the implementation of the VAW
legislation, despite the fact that they have considerable expertise and experience to offer that
would help to improve service delivery in particular.
In Bolivia, meanwhile, role clarity emerged as a problem, especially in relation to the law on
political violence against women:
One weakness of the text of this law is in the lack of clarity about which department
should receive complaints from the victims It says in Article 14 that the complaint
should be brought before appropriate authorities or jurisdictions, as applicable. It is
not clear which department or unit should process complaints.
Bolivia report
Social norms are shared, group-based beliefs about how people do and should behave, and
attitudes are individual evaluations or judgements of something (Alexander-Scott et al., 2016).
Cultural practices, meanwhile, are rituals or other behaviors that are strongly rooted in tradition,
religion, and folkways. Norms powerfully shape attitudes and practices because individuals who
deviate from group expectations are subject to shaming, sanctions, or disapproval by others
who are important to them.
Depending on perspective, these norms, attitudes, and practices can be negative or positive.
From a feminist and womens rights viewpoint, negative ones are those that condone, reward,
or promote VAWG and gender inequality, and encourage women and girls to suffer in silence
after experiencing violence. Positive ones, by contrast, support gender equality and the
elimination of VAWG. The research revealed that negative norms, attitudes, and practices are
affecting the implementation of laws through influencing the behaviors of both those who are
supposed to implement the laws, and the general public to whom the laws apply.
Occupation orders are impractical where [the] wife lives in [the] husbands village, like in
patrilineal systems of marriage. Enforcement of such orders is difficult, if not impossible.
VSU officer, Malawi
Furthermore, many officials who receive complaints of violence in Malawi do not intervene as
the law requires, or they refer the case for alternative dispute resolution, because they believe
domestic violence is a private, family problem.
We dont intervene in such issues because they are family issues and we may be
blamed at the end of the day.
A police officer, Malawi
A similar discourse was evident in India. State actors meant to enforce the law may openly
dissuade women from continuing with legal proceedings because of the dishonor they are likely
to face, or may emphasize maintaining the marriage through counselling instead.
In Bolivia, social norms and attitudes were discussed in relation to judges rulings in particular.
Judges are obligated to use la sana crtica del juzgador or healthy criticism/judgement44
in which they balance a rigid application of the law with the cultural, psychological, and
contextual details of each case. Instead, too many judges apply their own values and beliefs
about the way things should be, resulting in decisions that show a total lack of knowledge
about the structural subordination in which women live, and the masculine power of which they
are permanently victims (Bolivia report).
Judges, at the time of analyzing cases and pronouncing sentences, apply common
sense, their own values and conceptions, which are part of the patriarchal and machista
society that prevails in present-day Bolivia
Bolivia report
People dont believe it [but] you have lawyers who beat their wives you have police
officers who beat their wives
CSO representative, Benin
In Burkina Faso, meanwhile, social norms about the necessity and correctness of FGM/C
continue to pose problems for the implementation of the provisions of the penal code.
Social norms concerning stigma, blame, and guilt attributed to those subjected to violence also
pose a problem in several of the countries. A culture of silence makes women and girls hesitant
to report experiences of violence or to follow cases through to their legal conclusions, a problem
that is present wherever in the world VAWG occurs. The social norm to not report violence to
authorities owes to fears about social stigma, family dishonor, reprisals, losing their children
and/or the economic support of their husbands, among other consequences, as well as lack of
trust in authorities and of confidence in the system. In Benin, if women report violence at all,
many turn to religious or traditional leaders before or instead of turning to state institutions or
CSOs.
Some country reports referred to this culture of silence as a reason for implementation gaps,
with the idea being that the law cannot be implemented well if violence is not reported. Care
must be taken, however, to not blame poor implementation of the law on the reluctance of
women and girls to come forward. Their hesitance to report results from a combination of social
norms that urge women to keep silent about violence, and implementation gaps themselves,
which act as further deterrents. Unless the factors underlying womens silence are effectively
addressed, womens access to legal recourse will remain restricted.
5. Political will
In Section 3, in response to critiques of the overuse or misuse of this term, political will was
defined for the purposes of this research as the states prioritization of VAWG as a critical
concern, and the allocation of sufficient budget and other resources to realize the objective of
eliminating it (Abdul Aziz and Moussa, 2014: 12). Using evidence and examples that align with
this definition, research in four of the project countries identified lack of political will as a
contributing factor to implementation gaps.
In Benin, civil society interviewees observed that the state is quick to show an interest in
tackling issues concerning VAWG because of the funding the country would stand to receive
and has received from international partners, but that the government lacks a firm
commitment to implement the law. As proof, interviewees cited the fact that the government
ministry in which the key institutional implementing actors are located receives only 1 percent of
the total national budget, and required reporting to the National Assembly has not yet begun.
Furthermore, some politicians intervene in cases, with the effect that the law is not properly
applied.
While we say that the male politicians have the strong will to fight [VAWG], when theres
a rape of a child in a village, its the congressman who starts phoning around so that the
procedures arent followed.
Senior member of the civil service, Benin
In my stay in the police, I have never seen that kind of prioritisation in GBV cases from
the station using budgeted money ... generally, GBV assistance is through some
donations. The only activity that has received some support from management of late is
45
Crime Stopper just because the Inspector General himself was involved and he
prioritised it; otherwise, most of our activities are not supported by government funding.
A police officer, Malawi
In India, VAW, and the implementation of protective legislation more generally, is accorded low
priority, a point on which the Member of Parliament who was interviewed agreed. To
substantiate this, the researchers pointed to the underuse of funds allocated in the national
budget, the Centrally Sponsored Scheme lying abandoned, low appointment of protection
officers, neglect of coordination and monitoring needs, and low priority accorded to VAW cases
in the court system. In terms of which specific institution should carry the blame, the conclusion
of one anonymous respondent was that, the buck stops at Ministry of Women and Child
Development, which has not shown any political commitment to translate this Act into reality.
Although political will is broader than strong leadership, political leadership and commitment at
the highest levels of government proved important in Burkina Faso. The country report indicates
that, among the reasons why FGM/C has been successfully addressed, strong political
commitment figures highly. Although this support has fluctuated at times, it is traceable back to
the 1960s, and particularly the mid-1980s onward. Individual political personalities matter, too;
in Burkina Faso, there is some concern that FGM/C is now getting less attention with the recent
departure, following the 2015 coup dtat, of First Lady Chantal Compaor, who promoted the
FGM/C provisions of the law.
AN ISSUE OF GOVERNANCE
What came through quite clearly in the examination of the reasons for implementation gaps
despite the complexities is that they cannot be reduced to merely technical or logistical issues.
Although these play a part, this excerpt from the India report highlights the multiple deficiencies
that contribute to the problems:
Both protection officers and the judicial system are overburdened and not sensitised.
[The] Legislature creates new laws, but the capacity and strength of the system to absorb
it and roll out is severely limited, and therefore implementation suffers. Augmenting the
system is the states responsibility, but under this Act it is only optional, and not
mandatory. And there is no penalty if the directives are not adhered to.
India report
It must be acknowledged that some countries do not yet even have legislation on VAWG, and
that existing legislation in many countries must be strengthened. As such, enacting and
reforming laws is justifiably the goal and focus of a great deal of womens rights work. Yet there
must also be sustained attention and effort to improve the implementation of existing laws
(WHO, 2014). Better implementation provides advocates in countries without laws with
examples to learn from and aspire to, accelerates needed changes in negative social norms,
increases public confidence in institutions, holds perpetrators to account, strengthens the
imperative of the Due Diligence Principle, reinforces the message that VAWG is not acceptable,
and provides vital support and redress to women and girls whose human rights have been
violated.
1. Institutional infrastructure
First, effective implementation of VAWG laws requires appropriate, comprehensive, and
coordinated institutional infrastructure, through which women and girls who experience violence
can access services and pathways to justice. These systems should be multi-level and multi-
sectoral, and include CSOs and WROs. The Dominican Republic case is instructive in this
regard, with, for instance, its comprehensive care units, shelter homes, specialized police
offices, and behavioral center for male perpetrators. Importantly, these infrastructural
improvements do not neglect the local level e.g., a gender office was set up in every mayoral
office and had good coordination mechanisms, such as the Equality, Gender and
Development offices established in every government ministry.
3. Financing
Third, implementation must be sufficiently and sustainably financed. Governments need to
allocate identifiable, transparent, and ample budgets to fund implementation, and then to
actually use those funds as promised, and not over-rely on international, often short-term
funding. Unfortunately, none of the countries in the study provided a good example of adequate,
responsible financing. In India, the government did eventually budget for PWDVA
implementation, but not a single rupee was actually spent.
4. Political will
Related to financing, a fourth key element is political will including demonstrable political and
institutional commitment that prioritizes the elimination of VAWG, supported by adequate
resources. In Burkina Faso, political will has been shown in part by the individual politicians or
governments that champion the elimination of FGM/C, as well as a specific institutional, state-
led body the SP/CNLPE which is mandated to coordinate multi-actor initiatives and can be
held accountable.
6. Prevention
Sixth, implementation efforts are strengthened by the inclusion of initiatives aimed at the
prevention of VAWG, especially those that target individual attitudes and social norms that
condone or contribute to violence.46 Of the requirements of the Due Diligence Principle,
prevention has not been prioritized in legislation or in implementation as much as protection,
prosecution, and punishment. Some legislation explicitly addresses preventative social change
for instance, laws in both Nicaragua and Bolivia include the need to transform patriarchal
relations of power, and Benins calls for changes to educational curricula. However, these
aspects tend to be more weakly implemented than other parts of these laws.
In Burkina Faso, prevention strategies are not contained in the penal code provisions against
FGM/C, but rather carried out as part of related initiatives and action plans. An interesting, if
controversial, example of combining prevention with punitive measures is the public hearing
approach in Burkina Faso, in which judges visit communities to both charge those who have
committed FGM/C and raise awareness about the harms of the practice, in an effort to change
social norms.
A quote from the Dominican Republic country report captures the importance of being
organized and establishing good relations with the state:
From there, what roles can and do womens and feminist organizations play in influencing the
state to live up to its legislative commitments? What can we learn from the countries in the study
about how to influence for better implementation?
Each country report presents recommendations for actors who are pushing the state to improve
implementation, and examples from the Dominican Republic, India, and Malawi are particularly
instructive. Some efforts were more successful than others, but together, they demonstrate the
importance of well-organized, networked, and cooperative womens movements, that are willing
and able to both influence and work in collaboration with the state, while also effectively raising
public awareness of VAWG.
In India, as alluded to above, civil society especially WROs relentlessly advocated for
funding from the central government for implementation of the PWDVA. In March 2012, a
group of WROs submitted a Centrally Sponsored Scheme to the governments National
Commission for Women, including a proposed budget and detailed implementation plan.47
Later that year, with Oxfams support, the PWDVA Action and Advocacy Group was formed
and began advocating for the implementation of the scheme.48 This resulted, from 2013, in
substantial improvements in budget allocations for PWDVA implementation, and the Ministry
of Women and Child Development announced that the scheme would be piloted in 100
The NGOs, specifically the feminist ones, have had a very positive impact on the
good practices related to VAW. These groups have formed an unbiased opinion
within the population, in order to call the attention of government and other
institutions to the commitment [they have made] to respond to the support needs of
victims, and to the importance of punishments and supports for perpetrators.
A representative from the Behavioural Intervention Centre for Men, Dominican Republic
Based on the experience of womens and feminist organizations in the Dominican Republic in
influencing the implementation of Law 24-97, some important characteristics and abilities are
discernible. These actors must: be well-integrated in both internal and multi-sectoral/stakeholder
networks; demonstrate a constant willingness to collaborate among themselves and with
government on implementation; have the ability to transfer knowledge and good practices both
among themselves and to the government; and keep developing creative and novel ways of
lobbying and awareness-raising.
In light of the need for coordination and information-sharing between governments and CSOs, a
recommendation that emerges from the Dominican Republic research is that international
NGOs, such as Oxfam, should encourage and support these types of collaboration in the
projects they are involved in.
This research which aligns with what Oxfam staff and partners have seen firsthand in their
everyday work on VAWG will contribute to generating enhanced understanding about which
implementation gaps exist, why they are occurring and among which actors, what is needed to
improve implementation, and how influencing efforts could be changed or improved in order to
encourage states to live up their commitments. Informed by a positive deviance and
comparative approach, and replete with comprehensive case studies and examples not
previously available, the knowledge generated by this project will undoubtedly be useful to
Oxfam and its partners for their influencing work.
It is also hoped that policymakers, other duty-bearers, and influential leaders both in the
seven countries and beyond will meaningfully reflect and act on the evidence, key messages,
and lessons shared here in order to more effectively fulfill their obligations. Their jobs are no
doubt difficult ones, but no matter the circumstances, there are steps that every institutional
actor can take ideally in collaboration with others, especially WROs to act in response to the
content of this report.
Both the results and limitations of this study reveal opportunities for future research. For
instance, questions about gender-responsive budgeting and governance could be explored
further, as could the ways in which other elements of the legal framework such as family law
influence the implementation of VAWG laws. Reflecting on the limitations of a relatively small
study, similar research should be carried out in other countries to build the evidence base, and
could examine how religious and other cultural leaders who were under-represented in this
project support or hinder implementation of VAWG laws.
In terms of Oxfams work, this research reinforces the importance of the four main approaches
that frame efforts to eliminate VAWG/GBV: strengthen WROs, provide services to survivors,
change laws and institutions, and transform negative attitudes, norms, and behaviors. In
particular, the research highlights the links between the social and the political: while laws can
contribute to changing hearts and minds, existing norms and attitudes strongly influence the
implementation of legislation. Encouraging connections are being made between this research
and Oxfams new multi-country campaign Enough!49 aimed at challenging and changing
social norms that perpetuate VAWG, which is being implemented in some of the seven
countries that participated in this research. This research also supports Oxfams conviction
about strengthening CSOs, particularly WROs; they need to have the skills, capacity, and
funding to not only play their part in implementing VAWG laws, but also to hold governments to
account.
International human rights agreements and legislation in at least 127 countries enshrine the
right of every woman and girl to live free from violence, as well as the obligation of states to
protect this right. Laws alone will not eliminate VAWG, but they are a critical piece of the puzzle,
and commit governments to action. This report adds to the evidence that duty-bearers are not
doing enough to fulfill their commitments, but also contributes to the knowledge base about
what needs to be done and has worked in order to strengthen the impact of laws on the
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Research consultants and Oxfam staff in the seven participant countries were critical to carrying
out the primary research, writing and revising the country reports, and providing feedback on
this report. The commitment, time, and talents of the following colleagues are truly appreciated:
Os Antoine Coliko, Audrey Baril, Judith Perron, and Sara Farley in Benin; Teresa Morales,
Lourdes Montero, and Sergio Jess Snchez Armaza in Bolivia; Fatimata Ouilma Sinar, Anne
Bourget, Genevive Nmouth, and Magali Videau in Burkina Faso; Mara Jess (Susi) Pola
Zapico, Mar Garca Domnguez, and Zobeyda Cepeda in the Dominican Republic; Arpan
Tulsyan, Pooja Parvati, and Rajini Menon in India; Violet Chipao, Anthony Malunga, Grant
Kankhulungo, and Lingalireni Mihowa in Malawi; and Cecilia Medal, Angie Largaespada, and
Ana Mara Martnez Yerga in Nicaragua. Many thanks as well to other Oxfam program staff and
Country Directors or Executive Directors who supported and offered the time of these
colleagues.
Utmost appreciation is extended to all interview participants for their time, interest, and insights.
Many of them chose to participate anonymously.
An advisory group guided the project since its inception, providing strategic, conceptual, and
methodological input, as well as feedback on an earlier version of this report. Many sincere
thanks go to Zarizana Abdul Aziz (Due Diligence Project), Janine Moussa (Global Womens
Institute at The George Washington University, previously the Due Diligence Project), Lina
Neeb and Coralie Vos (Oxfam-in-Belgium), Ines Smyth (Independent Consultant), and Shukri
Gesod (Oxfam in Yemen).
Thanks as well to Philip Dines for copy-editing, and Helen Bunting and Anna Coryndon for
formatting and guiding the publication of this report.
Finally, the author would like to offer heartfelt appreciation to the past and present members of
the core team of the VAWG/GBV Knowledge Hub for their strong continuous support, strategic
guidance, and feedback on countless project documents and this report: Caroline Marrs,
Christina Polzot, Julie Lafrenire, Laura Haylock, Anja Kessler, and Adrienne Wiebe at Oxfam
Canada, and Michal Arnaud and Genevive Gauthier at Oxfam-Qubec.
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